US7551909B1 - CMOS transceiver with dual current path VCO - Google Patents
CMOS transceiver with dual current path VCO Download PDFInfo
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- US7551909B1 US7551909B1 US10/651,500 US65150003A US7551909B1 US 7551909 B1 US7551909 B1 US 7551909B1 US 65150003 A US65150003 A US 65150003A US 7551909 B1 US7551909 B1 US 7551909B1
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- quad
- locked loop
- controlled oscillator
- voltage controlled
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H03—ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
- H03L—AUTOMATIC CONTROL, STARTING, SYNCHRONISATION OR STABILISATION OF GENERATORS OF ELECTRONIC OSCILLATIONS OR PULSES
- H03L7/00—Automatic control of frequency or phase; Synchronisation
- H03L7/06—Automatic control of frequency or phase; Synchronisation using a reference signal applied to a frequency- or phase-locked loop
- H03L7/08—Details of the phase-locked loop
- H03L7/085—Details of the phase-locked loop concerning mainly the frequency- or phase-detection arrangement including the filtering or amplification of its output signal
- H03L7/087—Details of the phase-locked loop concerning mainly the frequency- or phase-detection arrangement including the filtering or amplification of its output signal using at least two phase detectors or a frequency and phase detector in the loop
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H03—ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
- H03L—AUTOMATIC CONTROL, STARTING, SYNCHRONISATION OR STABILISATION OF GENERATORS OF ELECTRONIC OSCILLATIONS OR PULSES
- H03L7/00—Automatic control of frequency or phase; Synchronisation
- H03L7/06—Automatic control of frequency or phase; Synchronisation using a reference signal applied to a frequency- or phase-locked loop
- H03L7/08—Details of the phase-locked loop
- H03L7/081—Details of the phase-locked loop provided with an additional controlled phase shifter
- H03L7/0812—Details of the phase-locked loop provided with an additional controlled phase shifter and where no voltage or current controlled oscillator is used
- H03L7/0816—Details of the phase-locked loop provided with an additional controlled phase shifter and where no voltage or current controlled oscillator is used the controlled phase shifter and the frequency- or phase-detection arrangement being connected to a common input
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H03—ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
- H03L—AUTOMATIC CONTROL, STARTING, SYNCHRONISATION OR STABILISATION OF GENERATORS OF ELECTRONIC OSCILLATIONS OR PULSES
- H03L7/00—Automatic control of frequency or phase; Synchronisation
- H03L7/06—Automatic control of frequency or phase; Synchronisation using a reference signal applied to a frequency- or phase-locked loop
- H03L7/08—Details of the phase-locked loop
- H03L7/081—Details of the phase-locked loop provided with an additional controlled phase shifter
- H03L7/0812—Details of the phase-locked loop provided with an additional controlled phase shifter and where no voltage or current controlled oscillator is used
- H03L7/0818—Details of the phase-locked loop provided with an additional controlled phase shifter and where no voltage or current controlled oscillator is used the controlled phase shifter comprising coarse and fine delay or phase-shifting means
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H03—ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
- H03L—AUTOMATIC CONTROL, STARTING, SYNCHRONISATION OR STABILISATION OF GENERATORS OF ELECTRONIC OSCILLATIONS OR PULSES
- H03L7/00—Automatic control of frequency or phase; Synchronisation
- H03L7/06—Automatic control of frequency or phase; Synchronisation using a reference signal applied to a frequency- or phase-locked loop
- H03L7/08—Details of the phase-locked loop
- H03L7/085—Details of the phase-locked loop concerning mainly the frequency- or phase-detection arrangement including the filtering or amplification of its output signal
- H03L7/089—Details of the phase-locked loop concerning mainly the frequency- or phase-detection arrangement including the filtering or amplification of its output signal the phase or frequency detector generating up-down pulses
- H03L7/0891—Details of the phase-locked loop concerning mainly the frequency- or phase-detection arrangement including the filtering or amplification of its output signal the phase or frequency detector generating up-down pulses the up-down pulses controlling source and sink current generators, e.g. a charge pump
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H03—ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
- H03L—AUTOMATIC CONTROL, STARTING, SYNCHRONISATION OR STABILISATION OF GENERATORS OF ELECTRONIC OSCILLATIONS OR PULSES
- H03L7/00—Automatic control of frequency or phase; Synchronisation
- H03L7/06—Automatic control of frequency or phase; Synchronisation using a reference signal applied to a frequency- or phase-locked loop
- H03L7/08—Details of the phase-locked loop
- H03L7/099—Details of the phase-locked loop concerning mainly the controlled oscillator of the loop
- H03L7/0995—Details of the phase-locked loop concerning mainly the controlled oscillator of the loop the oscillator comprising a ring oscillator
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H03—ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
- H03L—AUTOMATIC CONTROL, STARTING, SYNCHRONISATION OR STABILISATION OF GENERATORS OF ELECTRONIC OSCILLATIONS OR PULSES
- H03L7/00—Automatic control of frequency or phase; Synchronisation
- H03L7/06—Automatic control of frequency or phase; Synchronisation using a reference signal applied to a frequency- or phase-locked loop
- H03L7/08—Details of the phase-locked loop
- H03L7/10—Details of the phase-locked loop for assuring initial synchronisation or for broadening the capture range
- H03L7/107—Details of the phase-locked loop for assuring initial synchronisation or for broadening the capture range using a variable transfer function for the loop, e.g. low pass filter having a variable bandwidth
- H03L7/1072—Details of the phase-locked loop for assuring initial synchronisation or for broadening the capture range using a variable transfer function for the loop, e.g. low pass filter having a variable bandwidth by changing characteristics of the charge pump, e.g. changing the gain
Definitions
- This invention relates generally to integrated circuits, and more particular to integrated circuits utilizing CMOS transceiver technology.
- Tranceivers are used in integrated circuits to communicate with circuitry off and/or on the integrated circuit chips.
- transceivers of the prior art tend to be rather complex, which increases the “footprint” on the integrated circuit chip.
- Prior art transceivers also have power, performance and cost issues.
- the receiver shall operate if the total jitter of data transition is less than 71% of the bit time, where deterministic jitter takes up 45% and random jitter, 26%.
- Deterministic jitter is also referred to as systematic jitter and is caused mostly by ISI and duty-cycle distortion.
- Random jitter is also referred to as nonsystematic jitter and is generated by a number of noise sources such as thermal noise, power supply noise, substrate noise, etc. Random jitter is Gaussian in nature, while deterministic jitter is due to non-Gaussian events.
- Random jitter is generated in both the transmitter and receiver.
- a transmitter clock is generated by a transmitter-side phase locked loop (PLL) or delay locked loop (DLL). Since this clock switches the serializer, the outgoing data stream inherits the jitter component of the PLL or DLL generated clock.
- the receiver clock samples the data with its own jitter component.
- the equivalent jitter is the sum of both jitter components.
- the random jitter will occupy a greater portion of the bit time and then the eye opening will narrow. Therefore, for a lower BER, jitter should be reduced in both the transmitter and receiver as the frequency increases.
- a clock recovery circuit takes a sequence of times at which a transition edge of a pulse crosses some threshold voltage and averages the times to extract the real input pulse timing. This averaging process makes the clock recovery circuit tolerant to input jitter. Jitter tolerance is a very critical requirement for clock recovery circuits. With the same circuit and process the jitter tolerance will be dependent on the transceiver architecture.
- transceivers are designed to be a macro-cell of an ASIC standard cell library as well as a stand-alone component. Thus, both small area and low power consumption become essential in the transceiver design.
- a test board with a small number of field programmable gate array (FPGA) chips is required.
- the FPGA in the transmitter side generates an appropriate bit sequence, and that in the receiver monitors the sequence and measures the BER. If built-in self-test (BIST) capability is included on chip, this will take the place of the FPGAs.
- BIST built-in self-test
- VCO voltage controlled oscillator
- K v VCO gain
- too large a K v induces detrimental problems in a PLL, while also causing large jitter and a narrow pumping current range.
- the control voltage of a VCO is disturbed by parasitic currents due to coupling and charge sharing. So, a large K v induces a large jitter.
- the current range of a charge pump is inversely proportional to K v , a large K v makes the pumping current range narrow, possibly causing instability in varying PVT conditions.
- a quad-channel design of the present invention exhibits power, performance, and cost advantages and offers a small footprint in many high bandwidth communication systems such as Gigabit Ethernet, Fibre Channel, network switch, etc. While sharing a single phase-locked loop (PLL) among multiple channels requires chip-wide clock distribution and potentially causes clock-waveform distortion, a local PLL dedicated to each channel alleviates clock-distribution problem. However, inter-channel noise coupling must be minimized with a careful power/ground design in both die and BGA-package levels.
- PLL phase-locked loop
- the tuning range of a voltage-controlled oscillator is sufficiently wider, thereby guaranteeing correct operation in extremely varying process, voltage, and temperature (PVT) conditions. Furthermore, unlike a conventional VCO with a similar supply voltage (1.8 V) and tuning range, which has too large a VCO gain (K v ), this low jitter transceiver incorporates a K v reduction technique and thus exhibits low jitter performance.
- one embodiment of the present invention provides a quad-channel transceiver comprising a phase locked loop circuit including a voltage controlled oscillator used to generate a clock signal, a FIFO buffer used to store data to be transmitted, a frequency comparator for comparing a reference clock to the generated clock signal from the phase locked loop circuit; and a folded starved inverter circuit contained within the voltage controlled oscillator wherein the folded starved inverter provides two current paths.
- one method of the present invention for operating a quad-channel transceiver comprises providing data to be transmitted into a FIFO buffer, providing clock signals using a phase locked loop and voltage controlled oscillator circuits, providing a plurality of delayed clock signals, and transmitting data using clock signals produced from a folded starved inverter circuit contained within the voltage controlled oscillator circuit.
- FIG. 1( a ) is a transceiver block diagram.
- FIG. 1( b ) is a transceiver block diagram with another reset from a frequency comparator.
- FIG. 2 is a block diagram showing components of a delay locked loop.
- FIG. 3 is a block diagram showing components of a delay locked loop.
- FIG. 4 is a timing diagram of the clock and data waveforms in a locked state.
- FIG. 5( a ) is a folded starved inverter with dual current paths with a combined architecture of a VCO and low pass filter.
- FIG. 5( b ) is the equivalent linear model of the folded starved inverter with dual current paths with a combined architecture of a VCO and a low pass filter.
- FIG. 5( c ) is the converted linear model (by N ⁇ C s and N ⁇ J p ) of the folded starved inverter with dual current paths with a combined architecture of a VCO and a low pass filter.
- FIG. 6 shows the sampler/phase detector connection to the charge pump and loop filter.
- FIG. 7 illustrates pumping current ranges of T bit and ⁇ T charging-intervals.
- FIG. 8 is a chip microphotograph.
- FIG. 9( a ) is a transmitter (Tx) output eye diagram at 2.5 Gbps.
- FIG. 9( b ) is jitter histogram of a receiver PLL clock at 250 MHz.
- FIG. 10( a ) is a transmitter (Tx) output eye diagrams at 3 Gbps with pre-emphasis off.
- FIG. 10( b ) is a transmitter (Tx) output eye diagrams at 3 Gbps with pre-emphasis medium on.
- FIG. 1( a ) shows a block diagram of one channel of the quad transceiver
- DLL delay locked loop
- DLL delay locked loop
- FIG. 1( a ) shows a block diagram of one channel of the quad transceiver
- DLL delay locked loop
- DLL delay locked loop
- FIG. 1( a ) shows a block diagram of one channel of the quad transceiver
- DLL delay locked loop
- DLL delay locked loop
- TxPLL transmitter phase locked loop
- the TxPLL 18 provides multiphase clocks to a serializer 24 and an additional clock to the other digital circuits.
- the receive portion contains a sampler phase detector 30 , a receive phase locked loop (RxPLL) 28 , a deserializer byte aligner 32 , and a pattern verifier BER counter 34 .
- FIG. 1( b ) shows a delay locked loop (DLL) 40 , that is operatively connected to a write pointer 42 , a 10 ⁇ 6 FIFO buffer 44 , a read pointer 46 , and a FIFO controller 52 on the transmitter side of the transceiver. Also shown are a transmitter phase locked loop (TxPLL) 48 , a pattern generator 50 , a serializer 54 , and an output amplifier 56 .
- DLL delay locked loop
- TxPLL transmitter phase locked loop
- the TxPLL 48 provides multiphase clocks to a serializer 54 and an additional clock to the other digital circuits. Also contained in FIG. 1( b ) is a frequency comparator 49 .
- a delayed locked loop (DLL) 40 receives TBC and provides a clock to a write pointer of the FIFO 52 , thereby maintaining synchronization with the internal circuit timing.
- the DLL 40 also provides a reset signal glock to a FIFO 52 control circuit.
- a frequency comparator 49 receives the TxPLL clock and Ref-CLK (or TBC) as the inputs, and provides another reset signal to the FIFO control circuit if the frequency difference between the two inputs is less than a predetermined value.
- the FIFO circuit 52 does not require any external reset procedure unlike conventional circuits.
- a pattern generator 50 can provide one of a several kinds of patterns for a link test. Programmable pre-emphasis and amplitude controls are employed to offset the effects of skin loss and dispersion on a long transmission line.
- the receiver side is composed of a sampler and dead-zone phase detector 60 , an RxPLL 58 , a deserializer and byte aligner 62 , and a pattern verifier and a bit error rate (BER) counter 64 .
- BER bit error rate
- FIG. 2 shows the structure contained in the delay locked loop 40 .
- the voltage-controlled delay line (VCDL) of the DLL 40 consists of five delay cells DC 0 , DC 1 , DC 2 , DC 3 , DC 4 numbered 70 - 74 as shown.
- the delay cells are connected in a cascaded manner in order to maintain the quadruple phase relationship between the TBC and the DLL output clock (DCLK).
- An XOR type phase detector (PD) is employed to receive the output of the circuit shown in FIG. 2 .
- the delay locked loop circuit also outputs 2 clock signals CLK 0 and CLK 1 which will be used in the circuit of FIG. 3 .
- FIG. 4 shows a timing diagram of the clock and data signals produced by FIGS. 2-3 .
- DCLK is used as the writing clock of the FIFO 52 .
- the XOR type phase detector exhibits only a 3 ⁇ operating frequency range, which is not enough to overcome extreme PVT variations. So, a coarse phase detector (PD) having an 8.75 ⁇ operating range is adopted.
- this circuit contains both a coarse phase detector 88 and a fine phase detector 86 .
- the coarse phase detector 88 is comprised of logic gates 84 and 2 other internal phase detectors 80 and 82 .
- the coarse phase detector 88 forces the delay time of the VCDL toward the lock range.
- the control is transferred from the coarse phase detector 88 to the XOR type fine phase detector 86 .
- This method allows the TBC, CLK0, and CLK1 signals to maintain the delay relationship as shown in FIG. 4 .
- the glock activates the XOR type phase detector 86 .
- the XOR type phase detector 86 removes the residual phase error between the TBC and the DCLK. Due to the coarse and fine phase detectors, the DILL 40 works well in the whole frequency operating range without causing a stuck or a harmonic lock problem.
- the signal glock is then provided to the FIFO control circuit 52 as a reset signal.
- the delay locked loop apparatus functions to provide a plurality of clock signals with appropriate delays.
- the circuit 88 receives the reference signal, the first delayed signal, and the second delayed signal, and then adjusts the delay time so that a period of each delayed signal is within a predetermined range.
- the harmonic lock prevention is accomplished by the first current steering phase detector 80 which receives the reference signal and the first delayed signal and outputs a signal based on a state of the first delayed signal and the second current steering phase detector 82 which receives the reference signal and the second delayed signal and outputs a signal based on a state of the second delayed signal.
- the method further includes a delay time adjustment circuit to increase the delay time if the state of the first delayed signal is high, to decrease the delay time if the state of the second delayed signal is low, and to output a harmonic lock prevent signal if the state of the first signal is low and the state of the second signal is high.
- the delay locked loop further comprises a residual phase error correction circuit to receive the harmonic lock prevent signal and to correct a residual phase error in the delayed signals.
- VCO voltage controlled oscillator
- PLL phase locked loop
- FIG. 5( a ) shows a folded starved inverter circuit 90 and a low-pass filter network 92 .
- Contained in the folded starved inverter 90 are cells 94 and 96 .
- Contained within cell 96 are a cross-coupled PMOS pair included to sharpen the transition edges of the output waveform regardless of the delay time and to provide a differential generating output voltage.
- the inverters, G 1 and G 2 give more linearity to the VCO gain, and its positive supply-sensitivity compensates for the negative supply-sensitivity of the starved inverters.
- the other NMOS transistors are connected to perform input and control functions.
- a network 92 is added with resistors and capacitors to filter out the high frequency components of the supply and to provide a clean voltage to the gate of an NMOS source follower.
- the current path of the original inverter is split to be a coarse-tracking path and a fine-tracking path.
- ⁇ V of a VCO control voltage V r if the original cell current (I c ) varies by ⁇ I c , the proposed cell current will vary by ⁇ I o /N.
- the VCO gain is N times reduced to be K v /N.
- the voltage V c of a capacitor C s filters out the high-frequency components of V r , tracks its long-term average value, and functions as a coarse-tracking control voltage.
- this analog scheme Unlike a digitally-controlled coarse tracking scheme, where either a tuning range is limited by an immovable control or a large jitter is induced by an abrupt control-update, this analog scheme exhibits both seamless frequency acquisition and the uniform VCO-gain reduction ratio in the whole frequency range. Moreover, the analog coarse tracking is performed without resorting to additional circuits.
- Both the effective VCO-gain and filter capacitance are N times reduced as shown in the equivalent linear model, FIG. 5( b ).
- the loop gain becomes 1/N due to the K v reduction, which is also verified by a simulation. Therefore, an N-times I p range can be utilized.
- the zeros N/RC s is N times increased, possibly causing the lack of a phase margin.
- FIG. 6 shows the connection of the sampler/phase detector to the charge pump and loop filter.
- the up and down signals from the sampler/phase detector 98 are fed through AND gates 106 and 108 into the loop filter 100 .
- the AND gates also receive an input from AND gate 104 .
- the inputs to gate 104 include the PCK0 signal and the PCK0 signal delayed by a time ⁇ T using delay circuit 102 .
- FIG. 7 shows how the data rate varies as a function of pumping current.
- CDR clock and data recovery
- the I p range will be constant regardless of T bit .
- ⁇ T is set to the least T bit , e.g. 0.25 ns
- the I p range will get wide in the whole data-rate range as shown in FIG. 7 .
- the I p range is not constant but increases with T bit as shown. Since, in general, the PVT variations of both K v and I p are opposite to those of ⁇ T, the PVT variations of both K v and I p compensate for those of ⁇ T.
- FIG. 8 shows the chip microphotograph.
- the prototype chip implemented in a 0.18- ⁇ m CMOS technology uses 324-pin PBGA package.
- the die size is 4.8 ⁇ 4.2 mm 2 .
- the transceiver operates at a data rate range of 0.6 to 3.2 Gbps.
- Measured recovered clock jitter is 80 ps pk-pk at 2.5 Gbps.
- FIG. 9( a ) shows the Tx output eye diagram measured at 2.5 Gbps for an 8B/10B coded random pattern with 8 channels in both the local and remote transceivers all activated.
- the measured jitter is 3.96 ps rms and 26 ps pk-pk.
- FIG. 9( b ) shows measured jitter histogram of a 250-MHz RxPLL clock, when locked to an input clock.
- the jitter is 3.58 ps rms and 25.2 pp.
- the 8 channels show 10 ⁇ 12 BER.
- no error are detected for more than 10 minutes ( ⁇ 10 ⁇ 2 ).
- the prototype chip except for I/O consumes around 580 mW.
- FIGS. 10( a ) and 10 ( b ) show the Tx output eye diagrams at 3 Gbps with pre-emphasis off and medium pre-emphasis on.
- Table 1 summarizes the measured performance of the transceiver.
- the present invention includes a number of aspects.
- the invention includes an integrated circuit including digital electronic circuitry, and a transceiver coupled to the digital electronic circuitry having a voltage controlled oscillator having a plurality of current paths.
- the transceiver is a CMOS transceiver.
- a method for operating a transceiver includes providing a transceiver port and a voltage controlled oscillator coupled to the port, where the voltage controlled oscillator has at least two current paths.
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Abstract
Description
where Ip is the charge pump current and Cp is omitted for the simplicity. Both the effective VCO-gain and filter capacitance are N times reduced as shown in the equivalent linear model,
and as shown in
| TABLE I |
| Performance characteristics of prototype chip |
| Process | 0.18 μm N-well 4-metal CMOS process |
| Supply voltage | 1.8 V (core), 2.5 V (I/O) |
| Data rate range | 0.6-3.2 Gbps |
| Area | 4.8 × 4.2 mm2 |
| Power dissipation | 104 (mW/Gbps) × Data rate + 320 (mW) |
| (1.8-V core) | (580 mW for 4 channels @ 2.5 Gbps) |
| Accumulated Jitter of | 3.96 ps RMS/26 ps pk-to-pk (@ 2.5 Gbps) |
| Tx data | 6.39 ps RMS/42 ps pk-to-pk (@ 3 Gbps) |
| (with link activated) | |
| Accumulated Jitter of | 3.58 ps RMS/25.2 ps pk-to-pk (@ 2.5 Gbps) |
| of RxPLL | 4.23 RMS/29.2 ps pk-to-pk (@ 3 Gbps)) |
| (locked to in-clk) | |
| BER | <10−12 for over 100 test-pattern configurations |
| (@ 2.5 Gbps & 2.125 bps) | |
| Output Amplitude | 1-V pk-to-pk differential (nominal) |
Claims (13)
Priority Applications (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US10/651,500 US7551909B1 (en) | 2002-08-29 | 2003-08-29 | CMOS transceiver with dual current path VCO |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US40685802P | 2002-08-29 | 2002-08-29 | |
| US10/651,500 US7551909B1 (en) | 2002-08-29 | 2003-08-29 | CMOS transceiver with dual current path VCO |
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| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| US7551909B1 true US7551909B1 (en) | 2009-06-23 |
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| US10/651,500 Expired - Lifetime US7551909B1 (en) | 2002-08-29 | 2003-08-29 | CMOS transceiver with dual current path VCO |
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Cited By (13)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US20090131000A1 (en) * | 2007-11-21 | 2009-05-21 | Kuo Yao H | Radio receiver system |
| US20090189657A1 (en) * | 2008-01-25 | 2009-07-30 | Himax Technologies Limited | Delay locked loop circuit and method for eliminating jitter and offset therein |
| US20110193970A1 (en) * | 2010-02-11 | 2011-08-11 | Analogix Semiconductor, Inc. | Reducing Jitter in a Recovered Data Stream Clock of a Video DisplayPort Receiver |
| US20130107934A1 (en) * | 2011-10-31 | 2013-05-02 | Dacheng Zhou | Receiver Calibration Using Offset-Data Error Rates |
| US9602317B1 (en) * | 2015-10-12 | 2017-03-21 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Apparatus and method for combining currents from passive equalizer in sense amplifier |
| US10305675B2 (en) * | 2016-03-08 | 2019-05-28 | Ntt Electronics Corporation | Data phase tracking device, data phase tracking method and communication device |
| US10784871B1 (en) * | 2018-12-31 | 2020-09-22 | Marvell Asia Pte, Ltd. | Clocking architecture for DVFS with low-frequency DLL locking |
| KR102165817B1 (en) * | 2019-11-07 | 2020-10-14 | 서울시립대학교 산학협력단 | Device capable of adaptively adjusting tap coefficient of decision feedback equalizer |
| CN112332817A (en) * | 2020-10-13 | 2021-02-05 | 中国人民解放军空军工程大学 | Wide-speed high-linearity phase interpolator suitable for 1-28Gbps SerDes |
| US11402413B1 (en) | 2018-12-12 | 2022-08-02 | Marvell Asia Pte, Ltd. | Droop detection and mitigation |
| US11545987B1 (en) | 2018-12-12 | 2023-01-03 | Marvell Asia Pte, Ltd. | Traversing a variable delay line in a deterministic number of clock cycles |
| US11545981B1 (en) | 2018-12-31 | 2023-01-03 | Marvell Asia Pte, Ltd. | DLL-based clocking architecture with programmable delay at phase detector inputs |
| US11927612B1 (en) | 2022-04-07 | 2024-03-12 | Marvell Asia Pte Ltd | Digital droop detector |
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| US4755774A (en) * | 1985-07-15 | 1988-07-05 | Motorola Inc. | Two-port synthesizer modulation system employing an improved reference phase modulator |
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